The New Zealand Herald

Civil servant skips work for decade

- — Telegraph

A civil servant has been handed a nine-year ban from public posts after it emerged he had been absent from his €50,000-a-year job for more than a decade.

Every weekday morning, Carles Recio, an archives director in Valencia’s provincial government, would turn up at his office only to clock in and head straight out again, before coming back at 4pm to clock out.

It was a routine he managed to maintain for 10 years until last year, when, after colleagues began to raise suspicions, he was finally fired. To the anger of local authoritie­s, an attempt to prosecute him was shelved by state lawyers, who considered that his chronic absence did not constitute a crime. However, a tribunal in Valencia has now delivered the nineyear suspension over what it said was a “flagrant neglect of the essential duties inherent to the work post”.

Recio has repeatedly claimed that he was not to blame for his absence. “I do documentat­ion work out of the office, the work of a slave,” he told the channel La Sexta. “Working like a slave means that I work so that others get the fruit of my labour.”

The Valencian tribunal rejected that explanatio­n, noting that investigat­ions had failed to turn up any record of work he claimed to have done over the decade-long period. Neither did it find any evidence for his claim that he had told his superiors he had been left without a desk following an earlier relocation of his offices.

The tribunal said the provincial government had failed to properly supervise the assignment of work spaces. Group Ltd

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